Login About us Contact us Terms & Conditions

Comments

WW1
published by sylv38 - 11 years 2 months 2 days ago.

My father was born in 1895 so was old enough to go to war but had a problem with his eyesight so was sent from his home in Colchester to work at Woolwich Arsenal small arms factory. He never said what he did there but only left in 1919 after  the war. I guess he had lodgings somewhere in London ,  because he visited Kew Gardens at the end of the war where he met my mother !

Sorry I have no more details but thought this may be helpful   

Sylvia Claridge   (nee Fisher)


Eastfield Park
published by - 11 years 2 months 5 days ago.
I live at 9 Eastfield Park! We bought the ground floor flat in 2004 and the upstairs flat in 2007. We have since had a new staircase put in and have tried our best to return the house to as close to its original grandeur as possible. Bev, did you come and see the house a few years ago? I did meet someone who said that their grandparents used to live here but we had just had a burglary and I was reticent to invite them in. However if you're in the area again, please let me know and I'll be more than happy for you to visit!

Cardiff Arms Public House
published by - 11 years 2 months 9 days ago.
Thank you all for your help. The pictures are great and add to my history.

HEARSE Families, Wrington Area
published by Pat Hase - 11 years 2 months 10 days ago.

This is an extract from the 1851 census index which was made by Gordon Beavington in Canada before the censuses became universally available online. CD7 was the CD on which he published his Somerset transcriptions. It was a fantastic and extremely valuable contribution to family history research which Gordon made at that time. There is a Web site called My Censuses which covers his work.


Jane Ann WASHER and John COOK
published by Pat Hase - 11 years 2 months 12 days ago.

If you look at the transcriptions of the Berrow marriages on this site you will find their marriage in May 1861.  Censuses will tell you where their 4 children were born and in fact you can find the christenings of 3 of them in the Bleadon Baptisms on this site.  It certainly looks as if John COOK was a successful farmer in Bleadon for many years.  Jane is still there as a widow in 1911.

on FreeBMD there is this death which certainly looks like a possibility

Deaths  Sep qrt. 1918
Cook  Jane A    83    Axbridge    5c     499


WW1 Stories
published by - 11 years 2 months 12 days ago.

Dear Editor,

 

You may find this little story interesting and may wish to print it.

 

It is true that things happen when you least expect them. I was visiting the excellent ‘In Flanders Fields’ museum in Ypres, Belgium in February this year.

 

Since its refurbishment in 1998, there is an interactive side to it. When you enter the museum, you press a button on what appears to be a cash point machine. The machine issues you with a small card with a name and barcode of a soldier who had died in the area upon it. At intervals around the museum, the card is placed in a slot and information is displayed about that particular soldier. I must admit I was stunned when I looked at the name on the card, it read William (Billy) Banwell. Being a Banwell myself, I was intrigued by this coincidence and vowed to try to find out about William.

 

William or ‘Bill’ Banwell was born in Dunedin in Otago in New Zealand on the 4th October 1882. His father had shortly before come from England, his mother from Ireland. Bill is the youngest of nine children. He attended the Union Street School and then worked as a labourer for the coal dealers, J. Macfie and Co, in Dunedin. In 1906, he marries Frances Mary Payne. The couple have four children. Bill is a Corporal in the Dunedin City Guards, a local army unit, and plays rugby. After military training, Bill Banwell leaves New Zealand and goes to the Front on 14th August 1915.

 

Bill Banwell belongs to the1st Battalion, Otago Infantry Regiment, of the New Zealand Division. His unit fights first in Egypt then at Gallipoli (1915). On the Western front, he takes part in the battle of the Somme. On the 27th September 1916, he is wounded there. One week later he can leave the hospital in Rouen and again join his unit. In June 1917, he is assigned to a mine battle at Mesen. On the 14th June, a week after the beginning of the battle, he is shot down as a German observation post near Sunken Farm (Warneton) is taken at night.

 

It was a surreal experience reading about this man with the same surname as me. He being dragged halfway around the globe to die for a country he probably only heard stories about, and me stumbling upon his gallant story.

 

I would be interested to hear from anyone who may know this family in New Zealand and to be able to locate where Bill’s parents came from in the UK.

 

Roy Banwell


Page 365 of 485 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370

Forthcoming Events

Workshop by Zoom: In the footsteps of Hans Fowler Price
Wednesday, 23rd July, 2025 19:30 - 20:30
Library Help Session
Monday, 18th August, 2025 10:30 - 13:00
Library Help Session
Saturday, 6th September, 2025 14:00 - 15:30
Physical Members' Meeting
Wednesday, 10th September, 2025 14:30 - 17:00
Library Help Session
Monday, 15th September, 2025 10:30 - 13:00
<- View calendar for more

Recent Comments

Gone but not forgotten
1 months 7 days ago
June 2025 Newsletter
1 months 16 days ago
Cox
2 months 9 days ago
Cox
2 months 9 days ago
Cox
2 months 9 days ago
GOULSTONE
2 months 9 days ago
GOULSTONE
2 months 9 days ago
May 2025 Newsletter
2 months 11 days ago
more comments





Website written and designed by:
Weston IT Solutions
Copyright (c) 2018